McConnell Says a Coronavirus Stimulus Package Is ‘Unlikely in the Next Three Weeks’

Congress likely will not pass another coronavirus stimulus package before the Nov. 3 election, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Friday, CNBC informed.

The White House and Democrats have restarted last-ditch talks toward an elusive relief deal. Speaking in his home state of Kentucky, the Republican told reporters “the situation’s kind of murky” while negotiators try to “elbow for political advantage” as Americans cast their ballots.

“I’d like to see us rise above that like we did back in March and April, but I think that’s unlikely in the next three weeks,” he said.

McConnell and Republicans have pushed to swiftly confirm Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett as Democrats argue the next president should choose who succeeds the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The chamber will move forward with her confirmation hearing on Monday.

Officials in Washington have disagreed over how much money to put in a fifth pandemic aid package as economic pain for millions of Americans sharpens during a sluggish recovery. After he told his administration to pull out of talks earlier this week, President Donald Trump then renewed his push to inject trillions into the economy during his reelection bid.

In a tweet later Friday, Trump said “Covid Relief Negotiations are moving along.” He added: “Go Big!”

Shortly before the President tweeted, Trump economic advisor Larry Kudlow told Fox Business Network that Trump had approved another offer for Mnuchin to take to Pelosi. Kudlow, who is not part of the aid talks, said Pelosi and Mnuchin will talk again Friday.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin would still have to strike an agreement, then write a bill expected to cost at least $1.5 trillion. The package would have to get through both the Democratic-held House and GOP-controlled Senate — where Republicans have expressed concerns about spending trillions more on the federal response to the virus.

McConnell’s comments follow days of confusion about exactly what the President wants in a relief agreement. He called off talks Tuesday, then reversed course and asked for stand-alone bills to address direct payments to Americans, small business loans and aid to airlines to cover payroll.

His administration then signaled he would support a comprehensive deal that includes those provisions and potentially others. Pelosi and Mnuchin spoke Thursday about whether they could quickly find common ground on broad legislation.

Pelosi wants a bill that would reinstate the $600 per week enhanced unemployment benefit that expired in July and send at least $436 billion more in relief to state and local governments. She also aims to put tens of billions dollars more into Covid-19 testing, contact tracing and vaccine development. The House passed a plan with a $2.2 trillion price tag earlier this month.

Trump has opposed more state and municipal aid, though Mnuchin included $250 billion for those governments in his previous $1.6 trillion offer to Pelosi. The Treasury Secretary also proposed extra jobless benefits of $400 per month.

Congress has failed to send new relief money in months as the U.S. health-care system buckles under a rampaging outbreak. The country reported more than 56,000 new infections Thursday, the highest single-day mark in nearly two months.

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